Interesting item in The Atlantic (thanks, Mitch)...
Atheists are sometimes more religious than Christians
Survey shows how poorly we understand the beliefs of people who identify as atheist, agnostic, or nothing in particular. —
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"America is a country so suffused with faith that religious attributes abound even among the secular. Consider the rise of “atheist churches,” which cater to Americans who have lost faith in supernatural deities but still crave community, enjoy singing with others, and want to think deeply about morality. It’s religion, minus all the God stuff."
As Wm James said, the deepest religious impulse is not for god but for life, "more life, a richer life..." etc.
The etymology of the word is telling: "religare" means to bind or connect, to nature and to other humans.
But...
“I hypothesize that being ‘spiritual’ may be a transitional position between being Christian and being non-religious,” said Linda Woodhead, a professor of politics, philosophy, and religion at Lancaster University in the U.K. “Spirituality provides an opportunity for people to maintain what they like about Christianity without the bits they don’t like.”
I don't think spirituality is a merely-transitional phenomenon. Etymology again: "espiritu" means breath. To breathe is to live, and to deliberately honor and gratify the life impulse is to serve the spirit. Check out Carl Sagan's posthumous Varieties of Scientific Experience for a lucid discussion of the spirituality implicit in science, which he calls "informed worship."
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